Today I harvested my first tomatoes, some beets, and a carrot.
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Holding some roots! |
This year I am trying a variety of support styles for tomatoes. In past gardens, I have tried hardware store cages and the
ultomato supports.
Most of the productions tomato gardens I have seen use T-posts and twine to wrangle their tomatoes. This is one support technique that I did not try.
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Wasatch Community Gardens uses t-posts and twine to support tomatoes. (from gardendesk.com) |
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I am slowly building a pergola and fenced area around my garden. |
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Right now, my squash are taller than me on my slanted trellis. On the other slanted trellis, I am growing tomatoes. While they are resisting the incline, they seem to be doing well. |
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In my raised bed, my kale and lettuce have gone to seed. I am also growing tomato plants with string supports in this bed. For some reason, these plants are really scrawny and have brown, dry stems near the ground. |
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Another view of the string supports. |
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I have vertical chain-link on which I am growing tomatoes and Armenian cucumbers. I like the Armenian cucumbers because I can let them get huge and they still taste fine. One of my tomatoes is doing well on the fence, while the other is still way puny. |
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I am using single stakes to support some of my plants. In order for most of my support techniques to work, I have to prune all of the suckers, or the plants will get out of control. |
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My container tomato is doing great. It is as tall as me (5'7") and has numerous blooms. |
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I am using green garden Velcro tape to affix the plant to the stakes. |
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I have a volunteer cucumber (?) plant growing with a volunteer tomato. It has already outgrown the stake. |
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More container tomatoes! |
Next year I think I will try the T-posts and determinate tomatoes. This year I have all indeterminate, but I would like to can/preserve, and determinate tomatoes lend themselves to that more-so than indeterminate tomatoes.